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Eko

(9,929 posts)
Sat Jan 31, 2026, 01:43 PM Jan 31

Anyone here a plumber or know about plumbing?

My water stopped working last night. Worked fine when I left for work in the morning. When I got home I turned on the sink and it started to come out for a couple of seconds then stopped. Doesn't work anywhere. figured it was a frozen pipe so I put a heater on the pipe coming into the house all night. Tried it a few times and the same thing happens, runs a little them stops. Same thing this morning. I have heat tape on the pipes and insulation and the heat tape has been on since December. Any advice?

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PCIntern

(28,211 posts)
1. Do you have a crawl space?
Sat Jan 31, 2026, 01:46 PM
Jan 31

Neighbors all have water?

Do your pipes go on outside wall?

Enquiring minds want to know!

Eko

(9,929 posts)
2. no crawl space
Sat Jan 31, 2026, 01:50 PM
Jan 31

Neighbors have water.
Water from well same as neighbor.
I get water after him.
No pipes outside wall, all in garage on floor and in house, feed comes in garage from underground.

Response to Eko (Original post)

Eko

(9,929 posts)
7. That is what I am leaning towards. I just find it odd that if I leave it off for a few hours and try again
Sat Jan 31, 2026, 02:00 PM
Jan 31

It runs for like a second then stops. I would think if it was frozen it would just stop.

Response to Eko (Reply #7)

Eko

(9,929 posts)
12. Isnt it?
Sat Jan 31, 2026, 02:14 PM
Jan 31

No, I didnt see any fitting. There is a spigot about 12 ft further and I turned that and nothing came out.

Hutchewon

(60 posts)
14. Leave the valve/tap open but stay close to it.
Sat Jan 31, 2026, 03:16 PM
Jan 31

If the water runs briefly then stops it could be that the line is not totally blocked. Try turning the tap on and leave it on for 30 minutes. If that doesn't work, be sure to turn the tap off before you leave it unsupervised.

biophile

(1,359 posts)
6. The underground line could be frozen or broken/burst.
Sat Jan 31, 2026, 01:59 PM
Jan 31

We have a well that feeds water out to the barn. One year after extended cold the line out to the barn froze. It’s three feet down but still froze. Part of it is in shade constantly so sunlight doesn’t warm the ground.

UpInArms

(54,711 posts)
13. does your well have a submersible pump? Do you have a well house?
Sat Jan 31, 2026, 02:16 PM
Jan 31

is there a heater in the well house?

Eko

(9,929 posts)
15. On that I have no idea as I rent, but
Sat Jan 31, 2026, 05:53 PM
Jan 31

My neighbor is on the same line and he gets it before I do and his is working.

UpInArms

(54,711 posts)
16. So, it is a community well, not a private one?
Sat Jan 31, 2026, 05:58 PM
Jan 31

Some possibilities …

You may have a pressure problem, do you have a pressure regulator?

As you get a small amount of water before it quits, that seems somewhat likely.

Do you have a water outlet outside that is not frozen and is on the same line? That would prove that you are getting water from the source and the trouble could be closer in … do you have a basement and are your water lines accessible in that space, or is it a crawl space or slab foundation?

If you can heat the basement, it may thaw your pipe that is frozen.

ProfessorGAC

(76,461 posts)
17. Similar Situation Here
Sat Jan 31, 2026, 06:36 PM
Jan 31

We have an odd arrangement where our garage is in the basement. The rest ov the basement is finished like a 3rd floor.
But, because of that the "basement wall" is exposed to the elements and it's just concrete. When we had the walls put in, the guy ran the water from the washing machine behind the wall, so when it gets really cold, no house heat gets to the pipes.
What I've done that works is to find some area of the pipe that's easy to get to and put a blow dryer blowing on the pipe.
Copper & water are both really good conductors of heat, so the heat gets to the frozen spor
T and starts to melt it.
You only need a pin hole of flow because then just running the water brings in new mass that isn't close to the freezing point. The heat of the 45° or so water melts the rest of the ice.
If you're getting a little flow, the line has to have a tiny space for water to leak through, also meaning the whole line isn't frozen solid. If it was, the pressure downstream of the plug would be zero.
Try the hairdryer thing. Worked for me.

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